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Layoffs have climbed to their highest level in nearly a year—1.78 million workers were handed pink slips in May, the most since August 2010—increasing ever-present fears about the US economy. The Wall Street Journal highlights the latest casualties: Cisco Systems plans to slash 6,500 jobs; Lockheed…

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Apple unveiled its latest version of the MacBook Air yesterday, and it’s a beauty. The new machine runs the Lion OS, sports either a Core i5 or Core i7 processor, and has such bells and whistles as a backlit keyboard and a Thunderbolt port, the Christian Science Monitor reports. And…

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The Florida teen accused of killing his parents with a hammer before throwing a party told his best friend that he was possessed by the devil and had taken three ecstasy pills before the murder. The friend says Tyler Hadley, 17, confessed to the killings and showed him the bodies…

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Prince Andrew to step down as trade envoy, Buckingham Palace confirms

The prince will concentrate on boosting training and apprenticeships within Britain after a series of scandals Prince Andrew, who has come under pressure to give up his role as a representative for British trade overseas, is to step down, Buckingham Palace has said. The prince is expected to announce that he will concentrate on boosting skills training and apprenticeships in Britain in future, in what is bound to be seen as a significant downgrading of his role. Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge are expected to take a greater part in promoting trade during their future foreign trips. The prince, who has held the trade envoy role for more than 10 years since he left the navy, has been embroiled in repeated controversies both for the lavishness of his transport arrangements and for his links with unsavoury foreign figures including billionaires and dictators in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Libya and Tunisia. There were unresolved questions over the purchase of his former home, Sunninghill Park near Ascot, for £3m over the asking price by a Kazakh billionaire. His judgment was further questioned in March when he acknowledged a mistake in meeting the American billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, who was jailed in 2008 for soliciting a minor for prostitution. The prince turned to Epstein last December to help pay off his former wife Sarah’s debts. At that time, government sources suggested his role would be downgraded, though he received the public backing of ministers and it was said that the nature of his work occasionally meant dealing with questionable figures. There were calls for his resignation at that time. Reports have suggested that Andrew’s future role will focus on boosting business in Britain and acting as a figurehead in the government’s plans to increase industrial apprenticeships for young people. His press secretary was said to be on leave on Thursday. The prime minister, David Cameron, said: “I would like to thank the Duke of York for the major contribution he has made over the last decade to UK trade and the huge support he has given to British businesses as the special representative for trade and investment. I am certain that he and others in the royal family will continue to support and promote British business interests both at home and overseas.” Prince Andrew Monarchy International trade Economics Global economy Stephen Bates guardian.co.uk

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Stepping Hill sabotage: police continue questioning as two more patients die

Stockport nurse Rebecca Leighton continues to be questioned after sabotage of saline bags at Stepping Hill hospital Police investigating a hospital where bags of saline were sabotaged with insulin say they are now looking at five unexplained deaths after two further pensioners became ill and died. Detectives arrested a 27-year-old nurse, Rebecca Leighton, on Wednesday on suspicion of murder after bags of saline were found sabotaged with insulin at Stepping Hill hospital in Stockport. Police have been given more time to question her after a warrant of further detention was granted. It will expire at 9.05pm on Friday. No charges have been brought so far. An 83-year-old man who died on Thursday morning following a hypoglycaemic episode was named as electronic engineer Derek Weaver. A postmortem examination on an 84-year-old female patient who died on 11 July was inconclusive, but found she also had low blood sugar. Assistant chief constable Ian Hopkins sought to reassure the public that the patients who died became ill prior to police being called in, and noted that 60 detectives were working on the case. “Since the police have been investigating, and the measures have been stepped up in terms of security at the hospital, we have had no further incidents of deliberate damage or contamination of products within Stepping Hill hospital,” he said. Both pensioners had been patients on the wards in question, A1 and A3, where saline in a cupboard was injected with insulin. The police inquiry is focusing on patients’ treatment from 7 July. Hopkins said the police wanted to prevent further harm and once that was achieved they would look at cases before that date. Inquests have been opened and adjourned by the coroner into the deaths of Tracey Arden, 44, George Keep, 84, and Arnold Lancaster, 71, who are thought to have died following the deliberate contamination of saline with insulin. Hopkins said of the latest deaths: “The cause of this man and woman’s deaths is not known and it is important we do not lose sight of this fact.” He said it was likely police will be asked to investigate further deaths: “In the main these are likely to be deaths of people who are elderly and/or ill, and we fully support the coroner’s ‘belt and braces’ approach to ensuring future deaths that require further investigation are appropriately investigated and scrutinised.” He added that any suggestion the investigation was near to being complete was misleading. Weaver’s family said he was a self-taught electronic engineer who ran an alarm business in Stockport. “He loved dining out at French restaurants and had a keen interest in cars and classical music,” they said. “He was a lovely gentleman who will be deeply missed.” Meanwhile, Leighton’s friends expressed their shock at her arrest. On 8 July, four days before police were called in after a nurse realised something was seriously amiss on her ward, Leighton posted on her Facebook page that she was “shattered”, telling a friend that it was going to be a long night. Those who know her portray a hard-working, cheerful and polite young woman who enjoyed nights out with her friends but found night shifts difficult. She followed her mother, Lynda, into nursing after taking an Open University degree. Her mother is a manager at Stepping Hill hospital, responsible for nurse training, and her father is a bus driver. Leighton was educated at a high school in Stockport. She lives in a flat above a darts shop owned by her fiance, Tim Papworth, 28, on the main A6 Buxton Road, a mile from the hospital. Hamid Bayatpoor, who works at a convenience shop, said she was a regular customer, and advised him when his daughter wanted to pursue a medical career. A close friend, Gavin Heaton, said she was a bridesmaid at his wedding two years ago. He added: “She’s worked at Stepping Hill a long time and worked her way up there. She enjoyed nursing. I’m shocked, I can’t believe it. My wife and her grew up together and I found her just to be a normal person, like any mate.” Another man in his 40s is critically ill at the hospital after suffering a drop in blood sugar and a woman who suffered a seizure is said to be recovering. Hospital staff say they are not concerned about the health of nine other patients who were affected by a fall in blood sugar levels. Chris Burke, chief executive of Stockport NHS foundation trust, said: “Our thoughts are obviously with the families of those affected by recent deaths at the hospital. Because a police investigation is still underway, at the request of the coroner, all deaths are being referred to the coroner’s office.” He said they fully support the coroner’s thorough approach to scrutinising and investigating the deaths. The General Nursing and Midwifery Council said it had begun proceedings to suspend Leighton’s registration following her arrest. Crime NHS Health Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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Many of the core grassroots supporters who raised big money for Barack Obama’s presidential run in 2007 and 2008 are gone now, disillusioned and dissatisfied by his presidency, replaced by professional Democratic Party operatives, reports Politico . “It’s a political machine now,” says a Washington State biotech exec who raised more…

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Eurozone leaders draw up radical plan to safeguard euro

Draft agreement at emergency summit provides for vast expansion in the role and powers of eurozone bailout fund European leaders are poised to take a quantum leap to safeguard the future of the euro and rescue Greece from insolvency by turning the eurozone’s 15-month-old bailout fund into a much more ambitious instrument resembling an embryonic European monetary fund. The deal being hatched at an emergency summit of eurozone leaders also looked certain to entail haircuts – losses – for Athens’ private investors, increasing the likelihood that Greece will become the first eurozone country deemed to be in some form of default on its sovereign debt. A 15-point draft agreement being negotiated provided for a vast expansion in the role and powers of the €440bn bailout fund established in May last year. If finally agreed, the package would be the biggest eurozone move since it created the bailout fund, following months of acrimony and dithering that prompted bitter criticism of EU leaders, particularly Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany. Currently the fund can only be used as a last resort to rescue a eurozone country whose plight jeopardises the stability of the euro as a whole. Under the radical plan, the fund would be able to intervene on the secondary markets to buy up the bonds of struggling debtor countries, to take pre-emptive or “precautionary” action to nip a debt crisis in the bud by, for example, agreeing lines of credit, to supply loans to struggling eurozone countries which would then use the money to shore up and recapitalise their banks. Such aid would apply, unlike at present, to countries not already in bailout programmes. The transformation of the bailout fund was directed not so much at Greece as at containing the threat of contagion to other vulnerable eurozone countries, an attempt to curb market uncertainty over the fate of the euro. If agreed, the rules governing the use of the bailout fund would need to be rewritten, throwing up political problems mainly in Germany and the Netherlands. Senior German government sources, however, said the new regime was acceptable to Merkel who would push it through the German parliament. As part of a new three-year rescue package for Greece, the summit appeared willing to countenance an effective Greek default, however temporarily and however “selectively” in order to satisfy German, Dutch and Finnish insistence that the country’s private creditors had to bear some of the costs of the new bailout by taking losses on their investments. The draft statement did not put a figure on the investors’ losses, but said: “The financial sector has indicated its willingness to support Greece on a voluntary basis through a menu of options (bond exchange, roll-over, and buyback) at lending conditions comparable to public support with credit enhancement.” In an attempt to satisfy the financial markets and the credit ratings agencies that there was no prospect of investors having to take losses elsewhere in the eurozone, the draft agreement said: “As far as our general approach to private sector involvement in the euro area is concerned, we would like to make it clear that Greece is in a uniquely grave situation. This is the reason it requires an exceptional solution.” Senior German and French bankers briefed the leaders on the various models for private sector involvement, proposing haircuts of around €17bn in a second rescue package worth €88bn, with eurozone governments and the International Monetary Fund supplying the other €71bn. German government sources indicated the creditors were writing off 20% of their investments. The €17bn losses, said a paper from the banks obtained by Reuters, “would almost certainly result in Greece entering selective default”. Senior eurozone government sources agreed that a Greek default looked inevitable, but that the summit was prepared to take that risk in defiance of warnings from the European Central Bank. Sources said eurozone leaders believed the default would last no longer than two months. The Dutch government said that objections to accepting selective default, mainly from the ECB, had been overcome. Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB chief, has warned that the bank will no longer keep Greek banks afloat by supplying liquidity for defaulted bond collateral. That role would probably shift, at least temporarily, to the eurozone bailout fund. German government sources said they had received assurances from the international ratings agencies that they would not rush to judgment in declaring a Greek default but would take their time in studying whatever finally emerged and for it to impact on Greece’s private creditors. The eurozone loans would be provided at interest rates of 3.5%, two points lower than currently, while the maturity of loans to Greece would be more than doubled to at least 15 years. There was also good news for Ireland and Portugal whose borrowing costs for their eurozone bailouts would also fall to 3.5%. As well as bailout funds, on top of the €110bn granted to Greece last year, the blueprint was also expected to entail a buyback of Greek bonds. Taken together, the lower borrowing costs, longer maturities, investor losses, buyback and bailout money were all aimed at reducing Greece’s debt burden of €340bn, making the debt sustainable and improving the prospects of Greek economic and financial recovery. On estimates from the European Commission, the package could cut Greece’s debt levels by €90bn. European debt crisis Euro European monetary union Europe Currencies Economics Euro Greece European Union Europe Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk

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James Murdoch ‘mistaken’ in select committee evidence, say Myler and Crone

Paper’s ex-editor and head of legal challenge News Corp executive’s statement to MPs at phone-hacking hearing James Murdoch has been accused of giving incorrect information to the parliamentary select committee hearing on phone hacking about a six-figure out-of-court settlement News International made with footballers’ union boss Gordon Taylor. In a brief but potentially highly damaging broadside, two former News of the World senior executives claimed the evidence he gave in relation to an out-of-court settlement to Taylor was “mistaken”. Colin Myler, editor of the paper until it was closed two weeks ago, and Tom Crone, the paper’s former head of legal affairs who left News International last week, issued a two-paragraph statement late on Thursday challenging Murdoch’s version of events in 2008. In their statement, Myler and Crone said: “Just by way of clarification relating to Tuesday’s culture, media, select committee hearing, we would like to point out that James Murdoch’s recollection of what he was told when agreeing to settle the Gordon Taylor litigation was mistaken. “In fact, we did inform him of the ‘for Neville’ email which had been produced to us by Gordon Taylor’s lawyers.” Murdoch, the News Corp deputy chief operating officer, is standing by his version of events, fuelling the prospect of another war of words over what exactly went on within News International when evidence of alleged widespread phone-hacking came to light. News International’s parent company, News Corporation, said: “James Murdoch stands by his testimony to the select committee.” The statement came as something of a bombshell to the culture, sport and media select committee, which is now expected to seek an explanation from Murdoch. Committee chairman John Whittingdale told the Guardian: “We as a committee regarded the ‘for Neville’ email as one of the most critical pieces of evidence in the whole inquiry. We will be asking James Murdoch to respond and ask him to clarify.” Earlier month, Murdoch acknowledged he was wrong to settle the Taylor suit, saying he did not “have a complete picture of the case” at the time. He repeated this line on Tuesday before the culture select committee, when he was asked by Labour MP Tom Watson: “When you signed off the Taylor payment, did you see or were you made aware of the full Neville email, the transcript of the hacked voicemail messages?” To this James Murdoch answered: “No, I was not aware of that at the time.” The “for Neville” email refers to an alleged News of the World reporter’s email to the private investigator at the centre of the phone-hacking debacle. The reporter was sending a transcript of Taylor’s voicemails and marked the email “for Neville”, believed to be the News of the World’s former chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck. The existence of the email was uncovered by the Guardian in 2009 and represented a challenge to News International’s then defence that the phone hacking was the work of one “rogue reporter”, former royal reporter Clive Goodman. It is also thought to have contributed to the decision by News International to sign off on a £700,000 settlement with Taylor, after he threatened to sue the newspaper for breach of privacy. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook Phone hacking James Murdoch Tom Crone Colin Myler News International News Corporation Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Media business Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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A former Fox News exec who helped launch the channel in 1996 claims the Rupert Murdoch-owned network has a “counter intelligence and black ops office” that may have engaged in a little phone hacking of its own. The New York “brain room,” which most thought was just a research department,…

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Witnesses are starting to paint a picture of exactly what happened at Yosemite’s Vernal Fall Tuesday when three people, now presumed dead , were swept over . One hiker first saw a man who had crossed the barricade leaning over the waterfall holding a screaming young girl. “I’m yelling at him, ‘You…

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